Dabble
September 04, 2006
Dabble Called A "Cool 2.0 Website" In the SF Chronicle

The SF Chronicle did a roundup of cool web 2.0 sites, and we made it!

It's by Dan Fost and Ellen Lee.

Dabble

Web address: www.dabble.com

Where they are: Berkeley

What they do: A TV Guide for Internet video, the site lets users tag and rate clips found throughout the Web. Viewers form communities based on their interests, helping sort the Web's top videos on such topics as baking a dessert and Japanese animation.

The skinny: Even before the company's premiere, Dabble Chief Executive Officer Mary Hodder was quoted in Newsweek and featured in a series of technology conferences. Now it must prove that it can easily help users find the gems without wading through all the junk on the Internet.

The competition: Though it counts YouTube and other online video sites as its partners, it also competes with them for attention in this crowded and popular space.

Here is the full text of the entire article, in case the link goes bad:

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/08/28/BUG32KOH9R1.DTL

San Francisco Chronicle
COOL WEB 2.0 SITES

Dan Fost and Ellen Lee, Chronicle Staff Writers


COOL WEB 2.0 SITES
08/28/2006


Flickr founders Stewart Butterfield and Caterina Fake made the cover of Newsweek for their popular photo-sharing site. Digg founder Kevin Rose made the cover of BusinessWeek after his news-ranking site took off. Online video hub YouTube is ubiquitous, while social networking giants MySpace and Facebook are in everyone's faces.

OK, we get it. Web 2.0 is a big deal.

[Podcast: Benny Evangelista with Phil Leigh on Apple settlement; Ellen Lee on cool 2.0 sites; Web-based word processing programs; and protecting laptop data.]

But what about the Web 2.0 companies that haven't made the cover of a magazine?

This is their week. The Chronicle today highlights some of the startups from this hot sector of the tech world -- companies that fulfill the Web 2.0 philosophy of community, sharing and user-created content, and that fit in the modern gestalt with things like video, music and digital photos.

The only real requirement is that the companies are something you probably haven't heard of before. And if you have, consider yourself hip. Debbie Landa, chief executive officer of the IBDNetwork, which runs the Under the Radar conference, says, "I'm definitely jaded because I know most of these really well."

This survey is far from scientific. Many intriguing companies did not make the list, including FareCast, which tells you when the airline ticket you want to buy is likely to go up or down in price, and Vyew, a utility (like Google's Writely) that lets you collaborate with someone online, and -- well, a list like that might never end.

In the first quarter of this year, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers, 134 Web 2.0 companies received $869 million in venture funding, on pace to beat the $3 billion that 465 firms raked in last year. And that's just the companies taking funding. Much of Web 2.0's appeal is that engineers can start firms in their basements.

So next year, check those magazine covers for the companies on The Chronicle's list. These guys are growing.
StumbleUpon

Web address: www.stumbleupon.com

Where they are: San Francisco

What they do: A free, downloadable browser button that lets people rate and recommend random Web sites to their friends as they "stumble" around the Internet.

The skinny: Three guys from Calgary, Alberta, developed the software and moved to San Francisco this year. They have $2 million in funding from some big Net names, including Lotus founder Mitch Kapor, Google board member Ram Shriram and famed angel Ron Conway.

The competition: Anyone who leads a Net surfer to something interesting. One could say competitors range from the news-ranking site Digg, Netscape and other news sites built on user ratings, to Google and Yahoo and other search giants.
Imeem

Web address: www.imeem.com

Where they are: Palo Alto

What they do: Users participate by joining online communities, called meems, or creating private meems where they can share music, video, photos, comments and blogs with their friends. It also rolls in instant messaging.

The skinny: Founder Jan Jannick came from the original Napster, as did many of Napster's engineers. In three months, its audience has grown from 50,000 to 800,000, though still less than the millions that congregate on MySpace.

The competition: It faces an uphill battle against other social networking and online community sites, such as the original and newly cash-infused Friendster, Tagworld, Bebo and South Korea's Cyworld. And of course the biggest and baddest of them all, MySpace and Facebook.
Slide

Web address: www.slide.com

Where they are: San Francisco

What they do: It's a toolbar that sits on your desktop as photos slide by, fed from whatever site you fancy -- whether it's your friends' Flickr feeds, or things you want to buy on eBay.

The skinny: Founded by Max Levchin, who struck it rich in his 20s when he co-founded PayPal and sold it to eBay, Slide attempts to organize the sprawling information of the Internet. It's a neat gadget but a crowded field. Net-watchers say Levchin's work ethic, to say nothing of his stellar track record and computing expertise, may give him an edge.

The competition: RockYou, which purportedly has a larger following, and FilmLoop, which has had more exposure.
Meebo

Web address: www.meebo.com

Where they are: San Francisco

What they do: Instead of downloading popular instant messaging services such as Yahoo Messenger and AOL Instant Messenger, Meebo lets you access your buddy list and IM all you want from its Web site.

The skinny: Backers include Sequoia Capital, the same folks that invested in Google, PayPal and YouTube.

The competition: Instant messaging services from AOL, Yahoo, Microsoft, Skype and others, as well as copycats such as KoolIM.
popURLs

Web address: www.popurls.com

Where they are: Austria

What they do: Popurls aggregates content from the Web's most popular social sites, so you can see in one fell swoop the hottest stories from Digg, the most popular photos from Flickr, the latest bookmarks on Del.icio.us, the most watched videos from YouTube, and other sites.

The skinny: Thomas Marban, who produced the site, says on his blog that he started it in March, and is now in the top 50 sites bookmarked on Del.icio.us.

The competition: NetVibes, founded by some Parisians, does something similar, including even your Google e-mail and allowing you to add other sites to the tracker. Microsoft and other tech giants have similar products in the works.
Dabble

Web address: www.dabble.com

Where they are: Berkeley

What they do: A TV Guide for Internet video, the site lets users tag and rate clips found throughout the Web. Viewers form communities based on their interests, helping sort the Web's top videos on such topics as baking a dessert and Japanese animation.

The skinny: Even before the company's premiere, Dabble Chief Executive Officer Mary Hodder was quoted in Newsweek and featured in a series of technology conferences. Now it must prove that it can easily help users find the gems without wading through all the junk on the Internet.

The competition: Though it counts YouTube and other online video sites as its partners, it also competes with them for attention in this crowded and popular space.
Pandora

Web address: www.pandora.com

Where they are: Oakland

What they do: Your personal Internet radio station.

The skinny: "I love Pandora. It's potential is limitless," said Kevin Smokler, a San Francisco author and blogger (and, he discloses, a friend of Pandora founder Tim Westergren). "For what it does, it's pretty damn great. Pandora creates a radio station based on collaborative filtering based on your musical preferences. There's more music than you can categorize. It's pretty great at exposing you to new things. It's the best window I have into the Web 2.0 idea that music is an endless garden of varietals you can just pluck from."

The competition: Many other Web sites are in the music game, from iTunes on down. "Pandora is cool, but Last.fm is more 'Web2.0' in the conventional sense of participation," says Garrett Camp, one of the founders of StumbleUpon. "Pandora is expert/algorithmically driven, whereas Last.fm is user driven."
Twitter

Web address: www.twitter.com

Where they are: San Francisco

What they do: A text messaging service that lets people send notes to groups. "You can send something to one number and it's distributed to other people," said Ryan Freitas, an interaction designer at Adaptive Path in San Francisco. "It tells people where you are. It's kind of like microblogging. It's really a lot of fun. Part of Web 2.0 is that it's fun and it's a utility combined with one another, so people enjoy what they're doing while they're getting something out of it."

The skinny: Founded by the team behind Odeo, a podcasting company in San Francisco's South Park (which is led by Evan Williams, who founded Blogger and sold it to Google).

The competition: Google bought Dodgeball, and many of the big cell phone companies are looking to add different messaging features to their menu of services.
Eyespot

Web address: www.eyespot.com

Where they are: San Diego

What they do: Upload your video to Eyespot and use its tools to edit it and publish it on other sites.

The skinny: Eyespot ranks among the top video editing sites, according to trade publications and analysts, tapping into the popular pastime of mixing and mashing video clips.

The competition: Software programs such as Apple's iMovie offer more whiz-bang features. Then there's Palo Alto's One True Media, which also makes it simple for users to create and edit music montages of photos and videos on the Web, then post them online. It also competes against San Francisco's VideoEgg, another site that make it easy for users to edit and publish videos on other sites.
Songbird

Web address: www.songbirdnest.com

Where they are: San Francisco

What they do: Download Songbird to play music from a host of sources.

The skinny: Called the potential "iTunes killer," Songbird was developed by the same people who created Winamp and the basis for Yahoo Music.

The competition: Apple's iTunes dominates the digital music sphere. And there are Web 2.0 sites that aren't the same as Songbird, but are also focused on music, such as MOG, a new MySpace-like site that helps users find fellow Black Sabbath aficionados, and La La, which also helps music lovers find those with similar tastes and swap CDs. And did we mention iTunes?
Revver

Web address: www.revver.com

Where they are: Los Angeles

What they do: Online video site.

The skinny: Revver helped make the "Mentos guys" $30,000 in shared advertising revenues and made them famous to boot. Now the Mentos guys have gotten an infusion of Mentos from the candymaker for future Mentos and Coke experiments. Oh, and Revver has attracted more viewers.

The competition: Too many to count. At the top are YouTube and MySpace, not to mention JumpCut, Fliqz, Veoh, Blip.tv, Guba, GoFish, vMix, Vidilife, iFilm, Panjea, Metacafe, Google, Yahoo, AOL and specialized sites such as Break.com aimed at young men.

E-mail the writers at dfost@sfchronicle.com and elee@sfchronicle.com.

Posted by Lisa at September 04, 2006 03:24 PM
Me A to Z (A Work In Progress)